Oppose Immigration Riders on Homeland Security Appropriations (H.R. 240)
Recipient: U.S. House of Representatives
View the PDF of this letter here.
Dear Representative:
On behalf of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, we write to express our strong opposition to the amendments that will be offered to H.R. 240, the FY 2015 Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act. After more than a year and a half of inaction by the House on one of the most important issues facing our nation, it is shameful that the House is opening the 114th Congress with a rhetorical assault on immigrants and on a number of common-sense policies adopted by President Obama over the past several years.
We are particularly troubled by the Aderhold and Blackburn amendments. Taken together, these would drastically limit the President’s authority to exercise common-sense prosecutorial discretion, a well-accepted aspect of law enforcement, to spare classes of deserving immigrants from the threat of deportation and to direct limited resources toward higher-priority cases. While prosecutorial discretion is hardly a solution to the longstanding problems in our nation’s immigration policies, it is the only remaining option at the President’s disposal given the House’s refusal to take up legislation on the underlying issues. With these provisions, the House is effectively saying “until we act, no one else can act – and we’re not going to act.”
While we understand the principle behind the Desantis amendment, which is to prioritize the deportation of immigrants convicted of several particularly egregious crimes, we are concerned with how it would apply in some cases. In particular, it would prioritize the deportation of domestic violence survivors if they themselves have also been convicted of any domestic violence offenses, something that does happen in many cases. Meanwhile, the Schock and Salmon amendments, while nonbinding “Sense of the Congress” resolutions, are premised on either erroneous or outdated information.
We strongly urge you to vote against the amendments, pass a clean DHS appropriations bill, and promptly deal with the underlying immigration issues through the appropriate deliberative processes. It makes no sense for the House to hold up DHS funding over a fight that it has absolutely no chance of winning.
If you have any questions, please contact either of us or Senior Counsel Rob Randhava at (202) 466-3311. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Wade Henderson
President & CEO
Nancy Zirkin
Executive Vice President